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Political Science and the Social Studies*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2013

Howard White
Affiliation:
Miami University

Extract

This report is concerned with the contribution of political science to the instructional needs of those who are preparing to teach, and of those now teaching, the social studies in elementary and secondary schools. How can political scientists in colleges and universities maximize the contribution which they, as specialists in one large field of human knowledge, can make to enrich the teaching of the social studies? Before offering suggestions which, if applied generally, should provide at least a partial answer to the question, the Committee on the Social Studies states two assumptions. First, most political scientists can do more than they have done in the past. Second, reverse lend-lease is anticipated. Political scientists have much to learn from teachers of the social studies as to what methods are effective in enabling youth to learn the ways of democracy and what types of material are most useful in the learning process. The recommendations in this report are presented in the hope that coöperation between the two groups will become more extensive and regular. The recommendations are divided into four classes, according to the incidence of responsibility for carrying them into effect.

Type
Instruction and Research
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 1946

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References

1 An excellent example is the series being prepared by staff members of the Maxwell Graduate School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. Two units, “The Structure of Local Government” and “Parties and Politics in the Local Community,” have been published by the National Council for the Social Studies. One member of this Committee, W. F. Murra, gave editorial aid in their preparation. Another member, S. R. Harrell, is chairman of the board of the National Foundation for Education in American Citizenship which has recently published two helpful pamphlets on Basic American Concepts, “Our Constitutional Freedoms” and “Political Parties: An American Way.”

2 The Federalist, No. 1.

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